Re: Clean Tone Tube Amp Question
I play clean, really clean most of the time. My first good amp was a '66 BF Fender Band Master 212 rig, but that amp was stolen. After that, for some twenty years I made my living as a single act, and my amp of choice was a SS SUNN Solos II 212 combo--a Twin Reverb killer, and to my mind one of the best SS amps to ever hit the market. But I wound up having to use a DOD FX Preamp and an MXR 10-band EQ to get some of the bass "punch" that the SUNN didn't have. Turns out, the SUNN was voiced to cut more like a Marshall than to have the deep bass of a Fender.
Eventually, I found my way back to using a tube amp and playing with a band again. I went through a Fender Super Champ, BF Deluxe Reverb, BF Tremolux 210 rig, Fender 75 and a couple of Marshalls--before finally settling on Mesa. My first Mesa was a 200-watt Mark III head and 412 Half-back cab. Just glorious tone, and it fit my needs perfectly. I now have seven Mesa amps, different sizes and configurations to handle any gig, any venue.
Now, Mesas are know for their distorted tone in the LEAD channel, and have been since the first Boogie, now known as the Mark I--and I love the LEAD channels of my Mesa amps. I don't like dirt boxes; I haven't played one yet that had the natural sound of a overdriven tube amp. But the FAT mode of my Mark V's clean channel is as good, if not better than any amp I've ever played.
And to be honest, I think the most audible difference in tube vs. SS amp is in the responsiveness of the clean tone, and if the way the amp responds when it is just slightly pushed to the edge of distortion. You can hear in a good tube amp how the tube responds to the dynamic of the pick attack as it hits, compresses, distorts, releases and decays. The SS amp won't have these audible artifacts--it's kinda either ON or OFF. I've never heard a pedal that really sounds like a tube amp distorting. And the only distortion pedal I have on board is a vintage Real Tube 901 with a 12AU7 tube--it gets very close, but it STILL doesn't respond like an amp.
If you're just going to play distorted all the time, ala "Scandinavian Death Metal", then to me--you might as well use a SS amp--I don't think at those volumes and with that much square-wave distortion that you can really hear the subtleties of tube distortion. But I will admit to having old ears, lol!
And of course, over the years there have been several attempts at building HYBRID amps. Music Man and Peavey were two that used SS front ends with tube power and there were others the did it the opposite way. Jerry Garcia used Alembic tube preamps and massive SS power amps from McIntosh with the Grateful Dead.
I think a lot of depends on how the amp is going to be used. I don't think one needs to spend $2,000 on a boutique, 7-watt Class A amp to use in a teaching studio; though it might work great for recording. Probably wouldn't cut it at the local R&B club with a band that has a horn section, or in concert at the Coliseum.
As always, let your ears be your guide, Do YOU hear the difference between a tube amp and one that's SS? Play them side-by-side. Better yet play them with your band. The bandstand is the crucible for me. Some amps sound great in your bedroom, but can't cut it on stage. And some, at least for me, are the opposite. My Marshall JCM 800 sounded AWFUL at low volume in my living room, but when it got hot and pushed hard all night--man, those third and fourth sets--it would be rippin'!!! I like my Mesas because I get good tone at low volume, and I know when they are cranked up, I'm going to be getting a lot of compliments on my tone.
So yes, for me...a GOOD tube amp will have better cleans than all but the very best of the SS and modelling amps. In the end, it comes down to what YOU like.
Good luck!
Bill